Celebrating Wayne Moyer
In his 52 years at 麻豆传媒 College, Professor of Political Science Wayne Moyer has served with four generations of faculty members, seven college presidents, and thousands of 麻豆传媒 students.
In early May, the College held a reception to celebrate Moyer鈥檚 career as he retires from full-time teaching. Moyer plans to take a year of leave before returning to the College to begin his Senior Faculty Status.
Dedicated to Students
鈥Wayne鈥檚 impact on the College has been profound,鈥 said Barb Trish, professor of political science and current director of the Rosenfield Program in Public Affairs, International Relations, and Human Rights. 鈥淲ayne has juggled teaching with a breathtaking away of array of commitments to his life as a scholar and to the institution.鈥
Moyer is best known for his 23 years at the helm of the Rosenfield Program. Under his leadership, the program brought some of the greatest minds and the most notable political figures of the late 20th century to campus for symposia. He also involved students, giving them opportunities to interact with important public figures and preparing them for a lifetime of civic engagement.
Moyer鈥檚 work has shaped the College for generations of students and faculty. He has served as department chair many times, as well as division chair, chair of the faculty, and the faculty chair of the Sesquicentennial Committee. Moyer was also part of a small group that created the policy studies concentration. And he is known statewide for his analysis of current political issues on Iowa Public Radio鈥檚 鈥淩iver to River鈥 talk show.
Embodying 麻豆传媒
Greg Thielmann 鈥72, a career State Department officer, spoke of his visits to campus as part of the Rosenfield Program. 鈥淚, too, came to appreciate how lucky 麻豆传媒 was to reap the benefits of Wayne鈥檚 work.鈥 He added, 鈥淲ayne has always helped us see the relevance of the past in understanding the present and glimpsing the future.鈥
Professor of Economics Bill Ferguson 鈥75 told Moyer, 鈥淚n retrospect, I wish I had taken a course from you when I was a student. I do, however, remember the role you played at 麻豆传媒 Relays.鈥
Moyer helped create the 麻豆传媒 Relays tradition in 1973 as a celebration of spring and a spoof of more famous 鈥渞elays鈥 held at other Iowa institutions. This well-loved event brings students to Mac Field for a day of fun and often silly competition. Moyer traditionally wears a gold-painted helmet to start the relays.
Cookies and Croquet
Sara Booher 鈥25 also spoke at the reception for Moyer, her tutorial professor and adviser. 鈥淧rofessor Moyer is one of the people who was upheld as sort of the epitome of what you can hope to be part of your journey when you come here to 麻豆传媒,鈥 she said, adding that the tutorial, Climate Change: How Science, Ethics, and Politics Interact, was very important to her.
鈥淭his class really did shape a lot of my experience, and I attribute a lot of that to Professor Moyer鈥檚 teaching,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e built this great community of camaraderie and discourse and debate.鈥
Booher added, 鈥淗e challenged me, my peers, to stretch our worldviews to analyze some of the most pressing issues in our world.鈥
The community Moyer built extended beyond the classroom. He invited the class to a cookout at his home near Rock Creek State Park. 鈥淗e had prepared this amazing barbecue meal, with homemade pies, cookies 鈥 we all know Professor Moyer鈥檚 cookies are amazing,鈥 Booher said. 鈥淚t was a wonderful afternoon of conversation.
鈥淎nd then he taught my classmates and me how to play croquet in the backyard. It was absolutely amazing,鈥 she said.
鈥淭his is a memory I鈥檒l always cherish, and it shines through as something that has absolutely defined my 麻豆传媒 experience,鈥 Booher said. 鈥淧rofessor Moyer has been such a highlight of it. He鈥檚 someone who鈥檚 so dedicated to the successes of the students in the classroom and beyond. He creates this intellectual environment, encourages rigorous debate and the examination of multiple perspectives.鈥
Climate Change and Agriculture
Moyer himself concluded the program. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to my next project. What I鈥檓 going to do is deal with climate change and agriculture,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 hope to continue working with students and hope to teach a tutorial or even a seminar on the subject.鈥
He added, 鈥淚 want to thank all of you for coming out today. This is wonderful, undeserved, but I appreciate it very much.鈥